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To decrease the pH of the pool, hopefully keeping it at whatever alkalinity/acidity you desire.
Litmus paper tests the acidity or baseness of liquids.
Antacids are bases that can neutralize many acids like HCL. To neutralize an acid you have to add a base to it. Antacid tablets are used for heartburns and can reduce excess acidity in your stomach
Fexofenadine is an amphoteric which have basicity and acidity action (tertiary amine (aromatic amine) is a weak base while carboxylic acid is weak acid) Fexofenadine HCl is designed to be water soluble
The pH increases because the HCl is becoming less acidic. A pH of 7 is neutral. A pH falls below 7, acidity increases. As pH rises above 7, basicity increases. Diluting HCl means that the HCl becomes less concentrated, and therefore, less acidic. As it becomes less acidic, the pH will become more basic, and thus increase.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl)
Hydrogen chloride is an acid and its acidity depends on the concentration of the solution. For example, a 0.1M solution of HCl has a pH value of 2.0
To decrease the pH of the pool, hopefully keeping it at whatever alkalinity/acidity you desire.
Litmus paper tests the acidity or baseness of liquids.
Antacids are bases that can neutralize many acids like HCL. To neutralize an acid you have to add a base to it. Antacid tablets are used for heartburns and can reduce excess acidity in your stomach
Fexofenadine is an amphoteric which have basicity and acidity action (tertiary amine (aromatic amine) is a weak base while carboxylic acid is weak acid) Fexofenadine HCl is designed to be water soluble
In terms of acidity HI > HBr > HCl > HF
The pH increases because the HCl is becoming less acidic. A pH of 7 is neutral. A pH falls below 7, acidity increases. As pH rises above 7, basicity increases. Diluting HCl means that the HCl becomes less concentrated, and therefore, less acidic. As it becomes less acidic, the pH will become more basic, and thus increase.
Hydrochloric acid and nitric acid have comparable degrees of acidity; the strength of either acid will depend upon the concentration.
an acid Vinegar, lemon, and Oranges All contain acids
When HCl is added to water, some of the hydrogen remains as free H+ ions and some combines with water molecules to form hydronium H3O+ ions, both of which contribute to the acidity of the solution. The Cl- ions just drift around aimlessly in the H2O medium, enjoying the scenery, waving seductively at the passing positive ions, and wishing that an electrical current would come along and let them covalently bond into Cl2 molecules.
Medically, it would be called "gastric hypo-acidity", but I've never heard of it being a problem. The opposite, "gastric hyperacididty is a common problem. The lack of hydrochloric acid in the stomach is achlorhydria